HEALTH CARE PORTAL

The answer exchange walked users through understanding the Affordable Healthcare Act and how it would make an impact on their tax returns. A community was provided for user's to answer each other's questions.

The challenge

While I was working at a large fortune 500 company, the Affordable Healthcare Act went into effect. This included the launch of the healthcare.gov website. The goal was to educate users on the benefits of having healthcare, - now that it was mandatory. The company would be liable if they didn't explain exactly why health insurance was necessary. This Q&A portal would sit on top of an existing tax application and provide a community.

The objectives for micro site were:• Educate users on the benefits of having healthcare• Provide easy access to the healthcare.gov marketplace• Answer questions using a predictive model• Offer incentives for signing up early

WHITEBOARDING

Here's some initial whiteboard sketches

Assumptions

Our main theory was: "Users with similar demographic backgrounds were more likely to be involved in a community and seek answers there." This led us to our Main assumption: "Community will be a good resource for users who want to replicate their behavior offline - in an online world."

Users will provide personal information in exchange for more interesting information

Matching similar users will increase their engagement

The younger generation is using social media to make decisions

You can read more of the theories and assumptions below:

PERSONA workflows

Next came developing the personas. This was done by several research teams. This was the existing workflow, without any community of Q&A options.

Let's take a look at "Persona A's" workflow - this is a successful case. The user chose that she doesn't have insurance. She move onto the next screen that tell her she might "qualify" for the Affordable Healthcare act.

Let's take a look at "Persona A's" workflow - this is a successful case. The user chose that she doesn't have insurance. She move onto the next screen that tell her she might "qualify" for the Affordable Healthcare act.

Our user indicates she is married, provides her age and her spouse's age. She also provides information about her family and income. She receives more information and clicks "calculate".

Our user finds out that based on her household income she is eligible for assistance. She is taken to the medicaid website where she successfully signs up.

proposed USER FLOW

Based on that successful workflow and (many) failed one, I came up with the proposed workflow below.

wireframe walkthrough

Here's where the user starts. They're able to engage with the community right away. There is a quick filter on the bottom for the user to starts with some progress.

let us know where you live

This is where the portal starts to get to know the user and match them with other similar users in case they have questions. We've provided most commonly asked questions by state. Below the filters are the "Topics", these will continue to populate as we find out more about the user

DO YOU HAVE INSURANCE CURRENTLY?

The user is given the chance to choose if they have current insurance. The community and portal are constantly growing.

income

The user will answer their income using a slider

QUALIFICATIONS

If the user meets certain criteria such as income, family size, and insurance they're qualified for tax breaks. This page alerts the user about how to claim them.

ANIMATIONS AND TRANSITIONS

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